The most helpful favourable review

The most helpful critical review

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5.0 out of 5 starsThe Interdependence of Branding and Sensory Awareness
As Philip Kotler explains in an especially perceptive Foreword, "distinctive brands...have to be powered up to deliver a full sensory experience. It is not enough to present a product or service visually in an ad...The combination of visual and audio stimuli delivers a 2 + 2 = 5 impact. It pays even more to trigger other sensory channels - taste, touch, smell - to enhance...

3.0 out of 5 starsAlright
I had high hopes for this book after reading Buy.ology, and I wasn't that impressed. The book seemed very repetitive and could have been a lot shorter. I really wanted to finish it but I felt that it was such a drag to continue. It did have some interesting facts and information but I personally didn't really enjoy it. Perhaps others will find it more engaging than I did...

I had high hopes for this book after reading Buy.ology, and I wasn't that impressed. The book seemed very repetitive and could have been a lot shorter. I really wanted to finish it but I felt that it was such a drag to continue. It did have some interesting facts and information but I personally didn't really enjoy it. Perhaps others will find it more engaging than I did. :)

This book was "OK" certainly not earth shattering. While models were solid and the examples were good, the same of each tended to repeat themselves throughout the book with only minor changes in points being made. I found myself struggling to finish it for lack of true developmental content. It may just be that the subject is finite, and in that case i would have more enjoyed a shorter book :) by the way, one typo is too much to bear while reading - this one has a few ...thanks!

As Philip Kotler explains in an especially perceptive Foreword, "distinctive brands...have to be powered up to deliver a full sensory experience. It is not enough to present a product or service visually in an ad...The combination of visual and audio stimuli delivers a 2 + 2 = 5 impact. It pays even more to trigger other sensory channels - taste, touch, smell - to enhance the total impact. This is Martin Lindstrom's basis message, and he illustrates it beautifully through numerous cases with compelling arguments." Bernd Schmitt is among others who make precisely the same point. In Experiential Marketing (1997), for example, he and Alex Simonson assert that "most of marketing is limited because of its focus on features and benefits." They then presented what they characterized as "a framework" for managing those experiences. In Experiential Marketing (1999), Schmitt provides a much more detailed exposition of the limitations of traditional features-and-benefits marketing. Moreover, he moves beyond the sensory "framework" into several new dimensions, introducing what he calls "a new model" which will enable marketers to manage "all types of experiences, integrating them into holistic experiences" while "addressing key structural, strategic, and organizational challenges."

In Brand Sense, Lindstrom provides a comprehensive, cohesive, and cost-effective methodology by which to plan, implement, and then sustain effective sensory marketing. As he correctly points out, approaches to marketing have changed significantly in recent years. In the 1950s, branding belonged to the unique selling proposition (USP); by the 1960s, a focus on the emotional selling proposition (ESP) emerged; then in the 1980s, many brand managers adopted the organizational selling proposition (OSP); by the 1990s, "brands had gained enormous strength bin their own right, and the Brand Selling Proposition (BSP) took over." Inevitably, it now seems, the me selling proposition (MSP) emerged. What's next? Again I quote Lindstrom:

"There's every indication that branding will move beyond the MSP, into an even more sophisticated realm - reflecting a brave new world where the customer desperately needs something to believe in - and where brands very well might provide the answer. I call this realm HSP - the Holistic Selling proposition."

With meticulous care, Lindstrom explains how and why the methodology he recommends will enable all organizations (regardless of size or nature) to drive sales and profits with a commitment to the HSP. To his credit, he devotes far more attention to the "how" and "why" than to the "what," although he duly acknowledges the importance of creating or increasing demand for a worthy product or service.

Readers will especially appreciate Lindstrom's provision of a set of "Action Points" at the conclusion of most chapters. These will suggest how to apply the material to which they refer, and, will facilitate and expedite a periodic review later to ensure that effective follow-through has been accomplished. Obviously, it would be foolish to attempt to implement all of Lindstrom's suggestions. It remains for each reader to determine what is most appropriate to her or his organization's immediate and imminent needs. However, whether committing to Lindstrom's methodology or to any other, it is important to understand and - yes--appreciate the barriers to change initiatives when introducing any methodology which challenges, as James O'Toole so aptly characterizes them, "the ideology of comfort and the tyranny of custom."

This book is great, it provides you with the tools to help you take your brand to the next step.Sensory Branding is such a new concept and this book tells you what you need to know, to keep ahead.Taking a holistic approach to branding is a must in this era, and BRAND sense will show you how to do it easily and effectively.